Gallbladder histology
Summary
The gallbladder is a small, pear-shaped organ that sits just below the liver on the right side of the abdomen. The gallbladder's main function is to store bile, a fluid that helps digest fat. The gallbladder has three main layers: the mucosa consisting of the simple columnar epithelium; the tunica muscularis consisting of randomly oriented smooth muscles; and the outer connective tissue, referred to as serosa or adventitia.
Sources
- "Histology. A Text and Atlas" Wolters Kluwer (2018)
- "Wheater's Functional Histology" Churchill Livingstone (2013)
- "Junqueira's Basic Histology: Text and Atlas, Fourteenth Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2015)
- "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
- "Diagnostic Immunohistochemistry" Elsevier (2021)
- "Cytology" Saunders (2013)
- "Anatomy relevant to cholecystectomy" Journal of Minimal Access Surgery (2005)
- "Biliary Sludge Is Formed by Modification of Hepatic Bile by the Gallbladder Mucosa" Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology (2005)